Updated May 2026 · 8 min read
An honest, no-bait guide to every Block Blast cheat that still works in 2026 — including the one solver thousands of players use to escape "no moves left".
The fastest, safest, and most consistent Block Blast cheat in 2026 is the free AI Block Blast Solver. Upload a screenshot, get the exact moves to clear your board or beat your high score. No download, no signup, no ban risk.
Open the free solver →Type "Block Blast cheat" into Google and half the results promise things that don't exist: unlimited coins, free gems, infinite revives, "10 million score in 30 seconds". Those are bait. They either don't work at all, install adware, or get your account flagged.
There are exactly two categories of cheats that work in 2026:
Rule of thumb: if a "cheat" needs you to download an app or hand over login info, it isn't a cheat — it's a phishing or malware funnel.
This is the cheat. Every other technique on this list is a variation, a workaround, or a fallback for when you don't have the solver handy. The free Block Blast Solver reads your 8×8 board and the three current pieces from a phone screenshot, runs a search through every legal placement, and outputs the move sequence that maximizes line clears, combo streaks, and survivability.
There's also a manual grid input if you can't screenshot — paint the board, pick the pieces, hit solve.
Block Blast looks easy because the rules are simple, but the actual search space — every way to place three pieces on an 8×8 grid — is enormous. Humans can see two or three moves ahead. The solver evaluates every combination and picks the one that not only clears the most now but also keeps the next turn's board open. That second part — board health on the *next* turn — is what most players miss and is why the solver finds wins on boards that look hopeless.
Block Blast hands you three pieces per turn, but they refresh as a *set*. You don't get a new piece after each placement — you get three more only after you've placed all three. The 4-piece cheat exploits that: always treat the three pieces as one decision, not three.
Concrete play: when the set comes in, look at all three. Mentally place them in *reverse* order — what does the board look like after piece three goes down? If it's worse than your current board, swap the order. The "4-piece" part is that you also peek at the next set's first piece (it appears in the queue preview on most game versions) before committing.
Quick example: You get a long-I, a 2×2 square, and an L. Most players place the I first (easy) then deal with the L. Reverse it: place the L first to define the shape of the row, drop the I to *complete* a row, then use the square in the open space. Same pieces, very different outcomes.
This is the most useful cheat to learn if you want to *stop* relying on the solver — but the solver makes this decision in milliseconds, so most players combine the two.
When you get a brutal set of three pieces — say three big L-shapes when you needed a 1×1 — you can sometimes change them. The trick: close the Block Blast app completely (swipe it out of the recent-apps tray) without placing any piece, then reopen. On most builds, the set re-rolls.
Caveats: this works inconsistently because Block Blast has changed the piece-generation seed several times. On some versions the set is locked the moment it's dealt. On others, *placing one piece* commits the set; closing before that re-rolls all three. Experiment on a low-stakes run before relying on it during a high-score attempt.
Pro tip: Combine with the solver. If the solver says "no clear win here", that's your signal to try the re-roll instead of grinding a losing position.
"No moves left" doesn't always mean game over — it means *you* couldn't see a move. The solver almost always can. Here's the rescue routine:
This routine has rescued thousands of "lost" runs. Most players quit on a board that had two valid placements; the solver finds them in under a second.
Block Blast scoring isn't linear. Clear one line and you get base points. Clear two lines on the same placement — bigger bonus. Clear lines on *consecutive* placements — combo multiplier. Chain four placements in a row that each clear something and your score per piece multiplies up to 10×.
The cheat: deliberately *don't* clear a near-complete row when you could. Hold it as a 7/8-filled trap, then clear it on a future placement when you can chain it with another row. A row that takes three turns to clear is worth way more than three rows cleared one at a time.
The solver weights combo potential automatically. If you're playing manually, look at the bottom and rightmost columns — those naturally accumulate near-clears and are perfect combo setups.
Corners and edges are silent killers. A 1×1 piece placed in a corner is dead weight — it can only contribute to a row clear, never to a column clear, and it blocks future combo setups. High-score players treat the corners as expensive real estate.
The rule: never fill a corner unless you're going to clear a row or column on the same placement, or on the very next one. If the only "good" spot for a piece is a corner with no immediate payoff, you're already losing — re-evaluate the whole turn (Cheat #2) or run the solver.
Block Blast has no in-game undo. The rewind cheat fakes one: before every turn, screenshot the board. If your move turns out bad, you can rebuild the position on a fresh game (or in the solver's manual grid input) and try a different line.
This is a coaching cheat, not a game-state cheat — but for players grinding for a personal best, the ability to "replay" a position with the solver is the single fastest way to improve. Three hours of this teaches you patterns that ten hours of normal play won't.
Every cheat on this page works. But Cheat #1 — the free AI solver — replaces the other six on any board. Upload a screenshot and beat the level in seconds.
OPEN THE FREE SOLVER →The most reliable cheat is the AI solver at blockblastsolver.com. It reads your 8×8 board and the three current pieces from a screenshot and outputs the optimal placement sequence in seconds. Free, no download, zero ban risk.
AI solvers, the 4-piece technique, and the exit-and-re-enter piece re-roll work. Modded APKs, score generators, and "unlimited coin" hacks are either bait or get accounts banned.
Not when you use an external solver. Block Blast Solver runs in your browser, analyzes a screenshot, and tells you where to tap. It never modifies the game or talks to Block Blast's servers — there is no ban signal.
Yes. The browser solver is free with daily solves. A Pro tier removes ads and unlocks unlimited solves. Native iOS and Android apps are also free.
If any combination of placements still fits, the solver will find it — even when you can't. If nothing fits, use the exit-and-re-enter trick to re-roll the three pieces, then run the new set through the solver. Don't burn a revive ad on a board that's truly locked.
Players use them interchangeably, but a "cheat" is any external aid (solver, written tip); a "hack" implies modifying the game itself (modded APK). Cheats are safe; hacks risk your account.